All-terrain vehicle | Unmanned aerial vehicle | Remotely operated underwater vehicle | Sport utility vehicle | electric vehicle | unmanned aerial vehicle | Hybrid electric vehicle | Armoured fighting vehicle | Recreational vehicle | launch vehicle | Landing Vehicle Tracked | Vehicle Assembly Building | motor vehicle | all-terrain vehicle | Vehicle registration | Vehicle armour | Street-legal vehicle | Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle | Hybrid vehicle | Amphibious vehicle | vehicle registration | Star vehicle | Remote control vehicle | National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act | Motor vehicle theft | Lunar Roving Vehicle | Gross vehicle weight rating | commercial vehicle | Coach (vehicle) | Autonomous underwater vehicle |
Named by United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) for Charles Dinsmoor of Warren, PA, who invented the endless tracking "vehicle" in 1886, a forerunner of the modern continuous track and tracked vehicles.
Initially, from 1952, the Army Transportation Corps participated in cross-icecap supply trains using tracked vehicle convoys, eventually reaching as far as Station Nord on the east coast of Greenland.